Listen to the words of the God, who is son, brother, lover, and consort of the Lady:

I am the fleet deer in the forest, I am the beach which receives the waves, I am the sun which warms the earth. I am the Lord of the Spiral Dance of Life, Death and Rebirth, the gentle reaper, the Winter Stag and the Spring Fawn. All things are of me, for I am of the Goddess, opposite, yet not opposing. I bring forth from the womb that is a tomb, for I am the seed which fertilizes. I am abundant Life, for I am the grain that grows and I am death, the harvest in the Fall. And I am rebirth after darkness, for I am the seed that springs forth anew.

I am fertility, the spreader of Life, and I am the Lord of Death, which adds value to life.

I am the Guardian of the gate between Life and Death. I am the King of the Underworld, where no living being may venture, but I am also the King of Rebirth, turning the tomb into a womb.

I bring love and strength, peace and passion, hope and joy, for I am the gentle lover in the night.

All that comes from the Great Mother, the Divine Star Goddess, who is Mother of us all.

"THE ROMANS HAD A GODDESS WHOSE NAME WAS FIDES," WHOSE TEMPLE WAS FIRST CONSECRATED BY "NUMA", THE LEGENDARY SECOND KING OF ROME. HER SYMBOL WAS TWO RIGHT HANDS JOINED, OR SOMETIMES TWO HUMAN FIGURES HOLDING EACH OTHER BY THE RIGHT HANDS. AN ANCIENT GODDESS, "FIDES" IS THE ROMAN GODDESS OF FAITH AND TRUST. HER NAME MEANS "'GOOD FAITH'" IN LATIN; OUR WORD "'FIDELITY' "COMES FROM HER NAME. SHE WAS THE PERSONIFICATION OF HONOR, HONESTY, AND GOOD FAITH.

AUsRIN (pronounced ow-SHRI-nay) is the Lithuanian Goddess of the morning star. She is the daughter of Saule, Goddess of the sun, and Meness, God of the moon. It is Ausrin who Meness raped, causing Saule to slash his face and banish him from her presence. Ausrin was depicted as being very beautiful, wearing a crown decorated with a sun and a cloak made of stars. Each morning, Ausrin lights the way for her mother Saule to begin her journey across the sky. Ausrin is known in Latvia as AUSEKLIS, although some sources say that Auseklis was a God rather than a Goddess.

In some Buddhist denominations, the Twelve Heavenly Generals or Twelve Divine Generals are the protective deities, or yaksha, of Bhaisajyaguru, the buddha of healing. They are introduced in the Bhaiajyaguruvaiduryaprabharaja Sutra. They are collectively named as follows: simplified Chinese: ; traditional Chinese: ; pinyin: sh'i `er sh'en jiang Japanese: Juni Shinsho or Juni Shinno or Juni Yakusha Taisho The names of the generals are: The goddess Marishi-Ten, protector of warriors and protector against fire is sometimes worshipped as one of the Twelve Heavenly Generals.

ONILE is the Yoruban Goddess of the earth. A special society called the Ogboni serves Onile, and one of their particular roles is in settling disputes that involve spilling of blood onto Onile's sacred earth. She is said to have existed before the other orishas or Gods. Onile is very similar to the Ibo Goddess Ala, in that she represents both the fertile and the fallow earth, the beginning and the ending, life and death. Her name, which means "owner of the earth," is also seen as ILE.